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Cool projects I learnt about at lca2012

I went to linux.conf.au this week, and learnt about some pretty awesome tech (as well as hearing some entertaining, inspiring, touching and terrifying talks from the likes of Paul Fenwick, Bruce Perens, Karen Sandler and Jacob Appelbaum).

So here’s a quick dump of cool projects I learnt about, with links where I could find them.

Browserid serves one simple purpose: to prove you own an email. It’s distributed. The browser, (not a third-party server) is the login intermediary.

As an example: The login process to gmail generates a shortlived (in the order of hours or maybe days, I guess) cryptographically signed statement that you own that email, which your browser stores. Other sites just need to grab gmail’s public key and then they can themselves verify that the assertion you sent them proves you own (or can log in to) you@example.com.

Not awesome yet:
There’s no browser or email provider support. But it’s developed by mozilla, has scaffolding in js to work already in all browsers. Certs are stored on browserid.org for now, until browsers implement native support (so they are just as bad as a server intermediary, but only as a stopgap).

Computation in css. Very cool. There are implementations in IE and Firefox so far, and work on webkit is in progress. This is not just a convenience like SASS and friends - it allows for previously impossible mixing of units like 100% - 10px.

News on arbitrary metadata in git:

Apparently many people feel this is important for VCS interop (git-svn, fastimport, etc), and there are proposals for adding support (but it’s difficult to figure out how to do right in a way that won’t prohibit other useful things in the future).

safe-rm: replaces rm and has a blacklist of folders you probably don’t really want to remove, such as /usr/. No more bumblebeeing (can’t find the link, but there was once a bug in the bumblebee uninstall script that removed all of /usr as root).